Heavy black wood, hard as deknae, cracked across Devis's jaw. The bard flipped painfully onto his back. The sword slipped from his hand. His eyes rolled to his right, and he saw the blade embedded point-first in the hard earth, hilt waving in mock greeting.
Devis clambered back to his feet and yanked the sword free from the earth. The snarling wolf pack circled more distantly now, waiting to snap up anyone who ran from the fight. Diir circled and flanked the wight opposite Devis, dodging blows from the creature's black staff. Zalyn shouted a battle cry and charged into the fray in her gleaming armor, and the wight promptly sent her flying with the butt of the staff. She landed with a clang, but couldn't get up in the awkward armor.
Devis glanced around for Hound-Eye. The halfling had abandoned them after all. Devis would kill him. Then he spotted Hound-Eye crouched over the fallen elf woman, trying to get her to swallow a potion from Zalyn's leather bag. The bard detected no movement in Mialee's limp body, even after Hound-Eye tossed an empty vial over his shoulder, cursing and shaking Mialee gently. Potions could only do so much.
Revenge was a simple, animal thing, but Devis wanted it more than anything. He forced himself to turn away from Mialee's lifeless eyes and face her killer.
He should have stopped her. Why hadn't she listened when he warned her? It had to be magic. He should have caught up to the elf woman and held her back. He should have stood beside her and faced down Muhn and his guards, then taken the elf woman far away.
He should have stopped her.
He held no hope that they'd be able to find anyone powerful enough to bring her back from the beyond. Silatham was no good, he knew with chilling certainty. The "lost outpost" had not, apparently, been able to stop the undead. He knew Zalyn couldn't do it, and the missing brothers of her order were dead and stumbling around Silatham without eyes even now, if they'd gotten that far.
Devis ducked back from the wight's staff as it cut the air in front of his face. Focus, bard. He brought up his sword blade and felt it block the staff and violently bounce back.
The bard redirected his attack and sliced his sword into the creature's leg. The wight screeched and shoved the base of the black staff into Diir's gut. The elf retched and doubled over onto all fours. His swords clattered on either side of him.
Devis took advantage of the wight's distraction with expert timing. His long sword sliced the air and carved a neat arc through the back of the wight's neck, though the cut did not decapitate the creature. Before he could try again, one gray fist flew up from the creature and connected with a loud crack against his chin. The bard staggered to his knees.
Diir's short sword lay next to Devis's boots. He saw Diir struggling on the ground, coughing up blood as the wight turned from Devis and moved to strike the ranger again.
Devis dropped his own weapon and took up the blade Diir used to kill the crocodile.
The wight turned and loomed over the stunned Diir, who seemed unable to focus on the monster inches away. Hound-Eye wailed at the gods while Zalyn kicked and squirmed like an overturned beetle. Devis heard no sound from Mialee.
Devis raised the short sword behind his head and took two quick breaths. His eyes narrowed at the tattered rags that hung from the thing's gray, leathery back, and he hurled the short sword end over end like a carnival performer.
The throw was going to miss. The weapon tumbled away from him as time crawled to a standstill.
In the split second that was available, Devis managed to sing a single line that summoned a glowing hand-shape beside the tumbling sword. With it, he nudged the blade toward the wight. If he'd miscalculated the weight of the unfamiliar sword, it would simply smack against the monster like a club. In the process, they would lose what was probably the most powerful weapon they had.
Devis calculated correctly. The tip of the silver sword pierced the wight's back squarely between its hunched shoulder blades. The heavy blade sunk in to the hilt. The skeletal thing screeched in agony, and Devis smiled bitterly.
The black staff fell by the wayside as the wight clawed at the silver weapon. The hilt protruded from its back while the tip, extending several inches from the creature's chest, gleamed dully in the starlight. Devis stalked forward empty-handed, fists clenched, the last man standing. He grasped the sword and kicked hard at the creature's back. It stumbled forward onto its belly, then clawed and writhed on the bare ground. The thing was dreadfully hurt, yet it seethed with power.
As Diir regained his senses, he crab-crawled away from the thrashing flurry of rags and limbs nearby.
Then the wight's red eyes locked onto the short sword in Devis's hand. A vile curse exploded from it in a language the bard barely comprehended. Pinpricks of scarlet light deep in black sockets flashed intensely. Were they focused on Devis, the sword, or both?
Devis edged closer to the creature, which was now on all fours and trying to stand. A bony arm extended toward the fallen staff.
The slash across the back of the wight's neck formed a fleshy, ridiculous smile. If the sword could hurt the wight, Devis was willing to gamble that it could take the thing's head right off with little difficulty. He raised the magical blade overhead.
Before he could strike, the pinpricks of red in the wight's eye sockets flared brightly and the monster snarled a string of unintelligible invective. The air around it rippled like a heat mirage, and it disappeared.
The short sword cut through empty air. Devis lost his balance and barely caught himself before tumbling again to the ground. He blinked and looked at the short sword clutched in his hand, not quite sure what had just happened. Had the wight disintegrated, or disappeared? Was it gone or still here, invisible? Devis scanned the surrounding darkness.
A faint orange glow still flickered in the distance. The wolves had scattered, though he knew not why. Devis decided the wight, too, was gone. He dropped the short sword and ran to Mialee with a black knot of dread twisting in his belly.
Hound-Eye looked up into the bard's eyes. His face was wet with tears, and he convulsed with choking sobs.
"I'm sorry," the halfling choked, "I used all of our potions. They're no good!"
Devis gazed down at the glass-eyed, still-beautiful elf woman and felt tears crawling down his cheeks. Hound-Eye was right. Mialee's neck was broken.
"Ehlonna hinue, Mormhaor shan!"
Zalyn was on her feet and conjuring something to pursue the fleeing wolves and keep them running. Were his attention not consumed by the dead woman before him, Devis might have been surprised that their inexperienced young cleric had suddenly found the wherewithal to repel two dozen undead wolves. He might have noticed that the god the little cleric invoked was not the Protector. If Devis's eyes had not been glued to Mialee's body, he might even have spied the gnome tucking a golden icon engraved with a tree and unicorn into her leather bag.
Devis knelt and closed the girl's dead eyes with the backs of his fingertips, the only part of his hands not covered in wight gore. He noted sadly that Mialee's soft, pale skin did not flinch when an errant tear freed itself from his face and landed on her cheek.
A tiny gauntlet fell on his shoulder. "The brothers . . . they can-" Zalyn began.
The brothers from her temple. Devis, in his fury and grief, had not believed it possible they were alive. But even if the chance was slim, he had to try. He took his abandoned long sword from Diir and sheathed it.
Devis scooped the woman's body into his arms and stood. The rage gave way to resolve and a glimmer of hope. Still, their little band was so beaten and battered.